The New York City National Association for Parents of Children with Visual Impairments (NAPVI) NYC-NAPVI is an organization that enables parents to find information and resources for their children who are blind or visually impaired, including those with multiple disabilities, in the New York City area.

NYC-NAPVI provides leadership, support and training to assist parents in helping their children reach their full potential.

NYC-NAPVI dedicated to:

Providing Emotional Support Initiating Outreach Programs Networking Advocating for Educational Needs and welfare of children who are blind or have visual impairments

FamilyConnect FamilyConnect is a website created by the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) and the National Association for Parents of Children with Visual Impairments (NAPVI) to give parents of visually impaired children a place to support each other, share stories and concerns, and find resources on raising their children to adulthood. Content is available in English and Spanish.

The mission of the New York State Commission for the Blind is to enhance employability, to maximize independence and to assist in the development of the capacities and strengths of people who are legally blind.

Assists persons of all ages who are blind or partially sighted to lead independent and productive lives. Services include:

The Print Access Center: Makes printed materials accessible to people who are blind or partially sighted. Braille transcription can be produced rapidly from computer disks. Volunteers record material onto cassette tapes in fully equipped recording booths. A general interest library stocks a complete selection of reading materials in audio, Braille, and large-print formats.

Career Services for Adults: Assists individuals in formulating career plans, secure first jobs, and maintain current employment. The Lighthouse educates employers regarding effective and inexpensive techniques for workplace modifications.

Life Skills for Adults: Includes a full range of programs fostering independence for adults who are blind or partially sighted.

Low Vision Clinical Care: A low-vision exam is the first step for new Lighthouse consumers and is provided by specially trained optometrists or ophthalmologists. The goal is to help people with partial sight function more independently by prescribing optical devices, lighting strategies and other techniques, to make use of remaining vision.

Counseling: Assists individuals and their families to cope with depression and other emotions associated with vision loss. Individual and group sessions are available.

Independent Living Training: Focuses on lifestyle changes and adaptations that increase or maintain the ability to function at home, work, and in the community. Methods for managing shopping, cooking, childcare and other daily living tasks are included. Individual sessions in the home are available for frail adults, and group classes are provided at all seven Lighthouse locations. Orientation and mobility training is conducted by specialists who teach specific strategies, including the use of a cane, and moving safely both indoors and outdoors despite impaired vision. Using residual vision auditory cues or a cane, people with serious vision impairments can learn to safely navigate stairs, street corners, busy sidewalks, bus stops, subway cars, office corridors, etc.

The Music School: Offers individual and group instruction in a range of wind, string, percussion, and brass instruments, as well as vocal performance instruction. The curriculum has been designed to meet the needs of students who are blind or partially sighted, and to give them the skills they will need to participate in mainstream musical settings. The Music School presents a full season of concerts held both in the community and at Lighthouse Headquarters in Manhattan.

The Guild provides a wide range of services from birth to adulthood, such as Early Intervention, pre-school, education, communication skills, rehabilitation, medical and vision services, adult day care, residential care, and volunteer and library cassette programs.

The Guild Home for Aged Blind: A skilled nursing and health-related facility in Yonkers for visually impaired and blind elderly individuals.

The Newman Center for Alzheimer Care: A skilled nursing unit of the Home for visually impaired persons with Alzheimer’s disease.

The Center for AIDS Care: Offers an inpatient nursing facility for AIDS patients who require residential care. There is also an outpatient Day Health Care Program for persons with AIDS who live in surrounding communities.

Guild Net: provides case management and vision and health-related services to visually impaired elderly residents of New York State. The program reduces unduly long hospital stays, expedites the transfer from hospital to community-based facilities, and helps blind and visually impaired persons lead independent lives.

The Guild’s Day Treatment Program: Provides ongoing treatment for visually impaired persons with psychiatric diagnoses as well as for deaf/blind persons who are cognitively impaired.

The Guild’s Psychiatric Clinic: Specializes in treating the emotional impact of blindness. It offers a variety of diagnostic and treatment services, and support groups for blind and visually impaired persons and their families.

The Guild Cassette Library: One of the world’s largest private circulating collections of taped literature for visually impaired people. The library currently lists 1,600 unabridged alts, including best-selling works of fiction and nonfiction.

IN TOUCH Networks: The Guild’s national radio reading service for blind, visually impaired, or physically handicapped people is on the air 24 hours a day.

Provides diagnostic evaluation and short-term comprehensive rehabilitation, as well as personal adjustment training, job preparation, and placement for deaf-blind youth and adults 18 years of age and older. Many of the services are residential. There is a tuition fee.

This barrier-free branch of the New York City Public Library provides comfortable reading rooms, large collections of specially-formatted materials, audio playback equipment for listening to recorded books and magazines, and a variety of other electronic reading aids. The Library has a children’s room and a meeting room for concerts, lectures, and other special events. Also operates an extensive mailing program that delivers thousands of recorded and Braille books a day. The books are shipped free of charge, as part of a federal program established by the Library of Congress.

Computer TrainingComputer courses for people who are blind or visually impaired.Courses include Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access and Surfing the 'Net. Students learn to use the keyboard rather than a mouse to navigate the computer which can make it possible for them to email, shop on-line,or create documents, presentations and spreadsheets.There is a monthly open house that features a hands-on demonstration of computers equipped with screen magnifiers to enlarge print and screen readers which "tell" the student what is on the screen. Entrance seminars are designed to help students to assess their skills and select appropriate courses. Instruction is available for beginners as well as experienced computer users. Class material is provided in large print, Braille or tape depending on the needs of students.

Braille/Large Print ProductionProduction of short documents in alternate formats (Braille, large print).

Training and ConsultationConsultations to identify the most appropriate assistive technologies for customer needs. Training for teachers and personnel of organizations serving blind or visually impaired people on how to use assistive technology. Produces and distributes A Practical Guide to Accommodating People with Visual Impairments in the Workplace.